Attorney General William Barr on Wednesday defended his handling of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report at a tense Senate hearing, explaining in detail his contacts with Mueller, who had objected to his description of the report’s findings on obstruction.
In sworn testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Barr said he wanted to release the report’s bottom-line conclusions as quickly as possible because the public was in a “high state of agitation” over the results of Mueller’s investigation into Russian election interference and potential coordination between President Trump’s campaign and Moscow.
“Former government officials were confidently predicting that the president or members of his family would be indicted,” Barr told senators in his opening remarks.
View the complete May 1 article by Morgan Chalfant and Jacqueline Thomsen on The Hill website here.